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Disrupt, Collapse, Transform: The Role of Cloud Computing in Industry Transformation
Disrupt, Collapse, Transform: The Role of Cloud Computing in Industry Transformation
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Table of Content
1
3.1
Emergence of New, Disruptive Competitors 6
3.2
Digitalisation 6
3.3
Development of New Business Models 8
3.4
Servitisation and Productisation Waves 8
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1
A B O U T T H I S W H I T E PA P E R
We are living in an age of unprecedented industry change, as industries as diverse as retail, media and
manufacturing are undergoing rapid, and often unpredictable, transformation. This accelerating rate of industry
disruption is driving companies to adapt far more quickly to the changing business environment in order to survive.
The Kodak moment has evolved from a marketing phrase used to describe taking a picture at a never-to-beforgotten moment, to describing the failure of a company to adopt to changing industry conditions. Eastman Kodak,
which once accounted for 85% of film sales and 90% of camera sales in the USA, filed for bankruptcy in 2013, a
development largely attributable to its failure to adapt to the rapid changes in the photography industry, especially
the advent of digital photography.
Whilst Kodak is perhaps one of the best known examples, organisations in virtually every industry are having to
adapt to these unprecedented rates of change, driven by disruptive forces from digitalisation to globalisation to
servitisation, and the entry of new, disruptive competitors into their industries. In many industries, the speed of
change is also accompanied by an unpredictability that negates the ability to develop a long-term response. As a
result, survival is increasingly reliant on flexibility and short-term adaptability, with those organisations that have
the ability to quickly re-invent themselves in response to changing industry dynamics most likely to survive. A
crucial factor in this adaptability is cloud computing, which has emerged not just as a cause of industry change,
but increasingly as a necessary response.1
As cloud computing matures and becomes more established, not just as a technology but as a business concept,
organisations are gaining a more nuanced view of its benefits. As with many new services or products, cloud
was initially adopted on the basis of its ability to lower both capital and operating costs for businesses. With
industry change accelerating, however, the flexibility, scalability and adaptability of cloud have become significantly
important factors for adoption, as more organisations recognise the intrinsic agility it offers.
To understand the degree to which organisations are experiencing industry change globally and how they are
responding, Frost & Sullivan surveyed 1,500 senior executives (CEOs, CFOs, CIOs and other senior managers) in
seven countries (Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, Philippines, Singapore, the UK and the US). Respondents spanned
all major industry sectors, ranging from manufacturing to retail. The research shows that most executives not only
agree that their industry is rapidly undergoing transformation, but that flexibility and adaptability are increasingly
becoming key factors for survival.
In this white paper, cloud computing is defined as accessing and using IT resources over the internet
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R A P I D R AT E O F I N D U S T R Y C H A N G E
Industry transformation is affecting organisations of all sizes. The average lifespan of a company in the US S&P
500 index has reduced from 61 years in 1958 to 18 years today, and is forecast to drop to 10 years by 2018. It
is predicted that 75% of businesses in the current index will be replaced by 2027.2 For smaller companies, the
survival rate can be even lower. The five-year business survival rate for smaller companies in countries such as
Australia, the UK and the US is between 40-50%, which indicates that more than half of todays businesses will
not be around in five years time (see Figure 1).
Figure 1: Small Business Survival Rate by Country
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F A C T O R S D R I V I N G T R A N S F O R M AT I O N
A range of factors are driving industry change, but our research has identified four common trends that are
impacting organisations in all countries: the emergence of new, disruptive competitors; digitalisation; the need to
embrace new business models; and the growing adoption of productisation and servitisation. In several cases, the
advent of cloud computing has significantly contributed to the advancement of these trends, leading to it being
seen as an enabler of industry transformation.
3 . 1 E M E R G E N C E O F N E W, D I S R U P T I V E C O M P E T I TO R S
36% of executives believe that their industry has been significantly impacted by the entry of new, disruptive
competitors in the past five years, particularly in Singapore, Hong Kong and the US. This has been driven by new
competitors emerging from other regions of the world, or domestically-based organisations using new business
models or digital technology to disrupt existing industries. Industries such as media and retail are amongst those
where the entry of new competitors has had the most dramatic effect. It has also occurred in industries such as
hotels, where Airbnb has radically transformed the process of booking accommodation through its peer-to-peer
lodging network. Despite being established only six years ago, Airbnb now has 800,000 accommodation listings
available in over 190 countriesa much more comprehensive network than any global hotel chain.
In many cases, disruptive competitors such as Airbnb are using cloud computing to quickly scale their businesses
at low-cost. Airbnb runs its IT infrastructure on the cloud. US-based media company Netflix is another example of
a disruptive competitor using cloud computing to rapidly scale its business. Netflix acted as a significant disruptor
to the traditional DVD rental business when it launched its video streaming service in 2007, and is now used in
one-third of all US households, as well as having a significant market presence in over 50 other countries. Netflix
delivers its service over the cloud, and is widely credited for the demise of the previously dominant DVD rental
business Blockbuster, which closed its last US store in 2012. It is now posing a similar challenge to the pay-TV
industry.
Cloud computing is therefore a significant enabler of new, disruptive competitorsallowing new entrants to quickly
and cost-effectively roll-out new products and services and enter new markets, at a speed which can often
blindside established market participants.
3 . 2 D I G I TA L I S AT I O N 4
Digitalisation is the second major driver of transformation identified by executives, particularly the rapid onset
of the internet as a sales and communication channel. Whilst the impact of digitalisation on industries such as
recorded music is well known, it is now beginning to impact almost every business. Our research identified that
38% of executives believe that digitalisation already has, or will have, a total effect on their industry, with 62%
believing it already has or will have a partial effect. No executives believe that digitalisation will not impact them.
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Digitalisation is the use of digital channels, primarily the public internet, to conduct business
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The media & entertainment, IT & telecoms and retail sectors have been impacted the most, but executives in
healthcare, manufacturing and education also believe that a total digital transformation will occur in their industries
(see Figure 4).
Figure 4: Impact of Digitalisation by Industry
Manufacturing
Education
Health
Transportation
Construction
Mining
Capgemini Consulting, the Digital Advantage; how digital leaders outperform their peers in every industry
Australian Bureau of Statistics, Business use of Information Technology
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Infocomm Development Authority of Singapore, Infocomm Usage - Business
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3 . 4 S E R V I T I S AT I O N A N D P R O D U C T I S AT I O N W AV E S
The rapid increase in service productisation and manufacturing servitisation is the fourth major trend driving
disruption. Productisation occurs when service companies package their services in a similar way that many
products are marketedfor example, by outlining a standard set of steps to deliver the service, a fixed price and
a nominated delivery team with appropriate credibility. Productisation offers a number of benefits for both service
suppliers and their customers, including: allowing the production of standardised marketing material; introducing
price consistency; making the offer more comprehensible to sales teams (and hence easier to sell); improving
consistency and repeatability in service delivery (which can in turn improve customer satisfaction and profitability);
and making it easier for customers to compare offers from alternative suppliers.
Servitisation occurs when product manufacturers add or integrate chargeable services into their core products,
such as design and development, maintenance and technical support, installation and implementation or leasing.
Revenues from services are becoming increasingly important for many product manufacturers, especially for
more complex engineered products. For example, leading global aero engine and power generation equipment
manufacturer Rolls-Royce, now derives over 40% of revenue from services.
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Servitisation involves a complex shift for product manufacturersfrom a world of products, outputs and
transactions, to one of selling solutions and outcomes through a deeper relationship with customers and other
network partners (see Figure 6).
Figure 6: The Shift to Services
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China
Japan
Singapore
Australia
UK
USA
Sources: Cambridge Service Alliance, the Servitisation of Manufacturing: Further Evidence; Frost & Sullivan,
Survey of 1500 executives
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C L O U D I M P R O V E S A D A P TA B I L I T Y
Cloud computing is a key driver of industry transformation, enabling companies of all sizes to have access to IT
systems and functionality that have in the past been in the realms of large global competitors, at a much lower
cost. This is allowing smaller companies to rapidly expand their operationsgiving them the ability to quickly and
cost-effectively roll-out new products and services, and to service customers across the world. Effectively the cost
of failure in innovation has been substantially reduced. Cloud is also seen as a necessary response to this rapid
industry shift where change is not just faster, but also less predictable than ever before. Organisations increasingly
appreciate how cloud can provide them with the agility to respond much more quickly and cost effectively.
Cloud has a number of aspects that give businesses much greater flexibility than that offered by on-premise IT
resourcesnew products or services can be provisioned quickly and easily; new distribution channels added; new
pricing models introduced and new customers acquired. IT resources can be quickly scaled up or down, allowing
smaller companies to expand fast and larger companies to scale down quickly when required.
Organisations gain much greater flexibility to respond to industry change by using IT resources delivered over the
cloud. It effectively helps an organisation to future proof its business.
Adoption of cloud computing, particularly software-as-a-service (SaaS), is now mainstream. About 40% of all
organisations now use a SaaS model for at least one of their main business applications, with adoption highest in
the US (see Figure 8).
Figure 8: Adoption of SaaS for Key Business Applications
USA
Singapore
UK
Australia
Japan
Hong Kong
Philippines
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With 40% of all organisations now using a cloud solution, customer relationship management (CRM) and
e-commerce are the most commonly accessed business applications. However, the cloud model is now increasingly
used for many other core business applications that were traditionally hosted on-premise, such as Enterprise
Resource Planning (ERP), financials/accounting and manufacturing management.
Cost saving through lower licence fees and reduced hardware requirements has been the main driver of cloud
adoption. However, as the cloud computing market matures, organisations are increasingly appreciating its ability
to provide enhanced flexibility. The capacity to improve business adaptability is an increasingly important driver
of adoption, with 29% of executives rating faster response to industry change as a key factor, up from only 12%
in 2010. Hence, adaptability is fast catching up with reduced hardware costs and lower software fees as a key
reason for adoption (see Figure 9).
Figure 9: Main Reasons for Adopting SaaS
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C L O U D A S A S O U R C E O F B U S I N E S S A D VA N TA G E
Whilst adaptability is an increasingly important reason for adopting cloud, organisations that have done so are
recognising that it can give them a source of competitive advantage. Overall, 81% of organisations that have
now adopted SaaS for at least one of their main business applications feel that it has given them a competitive
advantage, particularly in lowering operating costs, the ability to launch new products or services more quickly and
an enhanced ability to enter new markets (see Figure 10).
Figure 10: Main Area of Competitive Advantage Obtained Through SaaS
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Email: apacfrost@frost.com
Website: www.frost.com
About NetSuite
Today, more than 20,000 companies and subsidiaries depend on NetSuite to run complex, mission-critical business
processes globally in the cloud. Since its inception in 1998, NetSuite has established itself as the leading provider
of enterprise-class cloud ERP suites for divisions of large enterprises and mid-sized organisations seeking to
upgrade their antiquated client/server ERP systems. NetSuite excels at streamlining business operations, as
demonstrated by a recent Gartner study naming NetSuite as the fastest growing top 10 financial management
systems vendor in the world. NetSuite continues its success in delivering the best cloud ERP/financial suites to
businesses around the world, enabling them to lower IT costs significantly while increasing productivity, as the
global adoption of the cloud accelerates.
Please visit www.netsuite.com.au for more information.
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